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Here are few tips for corporate event manager which will give ideas to decor stage, manage furniture, arrange food counter and catering service.
The POW/MIA Table
You may notice this small table here in a place of honor. It is set for one.
This table is our way of symbolizing that members of our profession of arms
are missing from our midst. They are commonly call POW's or MIA's…we
call them brothers.
They are unable to be with us this evening and so we remember them.
This table set for one is small... it symbolizes the frailty of one prisoner
against his oppressors.
The table cloth is white... it symbolizes the purity of their intentions to
respond to their country's call to arms.
The single rose displayed in a vase reminds us of the families and loved ones
of our comrades in arms who keep faith awaiting their return.
The red ribbon tied so prominently on the vase is reminiscent of the red
ribbon worn on the lapel and breasts of thousands who bear witness to their
unyielding determination to demand a proper accounting for our missing.
A slice of lemon is on the bread plate... to remind us of their bitter fate.
There is salt upon the bread plate... symbolic of the family's tears as they
wait.
The glass is inverted... they cannot toast with us tonight.
The chair is empty... they are not here.
Remember... all of you who served with them and called them comrades, who
depended on their might and aid, and relied on them... for surely... they have
not forsaken you.
Making a gear set for a wind up/down router and table. Made out of a broken flatpanel LCD screen. The plastic is the main light guide, which was used to scatter light from the 4 fluorescent cold cathode 3mm diameter tubes.
Plans at www.woodgears.ca
This is the way to go in marking out pieces for cutting, print the cad drawing onto paper and stick it on to the work-piece. I used double sided tape.
This end table is exquisitely carved out of solid mahogany, featuring four turned legs and a divine, glossy silver finish. The top features a beautiful marble pattern and a glass insert that is sturdy, easy to clean and completely glamorous!
26.25 IN W
26.25 IN D
23 IN H
Old fashioned bed pool table cake, made for a friends 18th birthday - everything is made from sugarpaste x
Sheraton Side Table
3rd Quarter of the 19th Century
Narra, Carabao Bone, Kamagong,Lanite & Silver
H:35” x L:50” x W:27” (89 cm x 127 cm x 69 cm)
Starting bid: P 300,000
Provenance: Baliuag, Bulacan
Lot 117 of the Leon Gallery Auction on 13 June 2015. See www.leon-gallery.com/v2/gallery/AuctionData-19-Spectacula... for details.
Baliuag, a town founded in 1840, was one of the major sugar-producing towns of Bulacan in the mid-19th century. Aside from sugar, it also produced handwoven silk fabrics, known as ‘habing Baliuag’ and was famous for its finely-woven Panama hats woven from buntal, the unopened leaves of the talipot palm.
Another major industry in Baliuag was making furniture inlaid with bone. Its proximity to the vast 68,000-hectare Hacienda Buenavista, the largest estate in the islands that belonged to the San Juan de Dios Hospital in Intramuros, assured its craftsmen of an ample supply of the dried ribs and pelvises from carabaos that were needed for making the tiny geometric pieces of inlay. Baliuag furniture was greatly influenced by the Sheraton Style. The side table above has turned, tapering legs and a bone-inlaid carcass frame. The drawer support is inlaid with a row of diamond-shaped lozenges separated by small discs with blackened centers called matangpusa, cat’s eye. The upper frame is decorated with inlaid squares of bone that resemble dentils, thereby giving the piece a classical look. It has a large central drawer flanked by a small concave-faced drawer on either side. The plain arched aprons join the square upper part of the legs that are inlaid with long, thin triangular pieces of bone radiating from a small disk to form a flower with elongated petals.
The drawers all have turned drawer pulls and silver keyhole shields. Their faces are inlaid with a quadrant cornered oblong reserve in kamagong and lanite. A swag of diamond lozenges alternating with discs is draped beneath the keyhole shield.
Project 365 = Day 270 = 26 Sep 2024
Day 1000 (Since 1 Jan 2022)
© 2024 Jeff Stewart. All rights reserved.
A table in Mottisfont house decorated with a display of "Fairy Cakes" (Cup Cakes) Hampshire National Trust
I used handmade clay tiles from Mercury Mosaics & Clay Squared to Infinity to mosaic the top of this little vintage side table. It will be auctioned off at a charity event on Sept. 18th. You can find more information about the event here www.bridging.org/
***UPDATE*** Thank you Sarah in River West. Your loft thanks you too! Enjoy the holiday.... 11/23/11
The frickin' awesome booths & tables at Rice To Riches, the rice pudding joint on Spring Street (btwn. Mulberry & Mott). I'm not a big rice pudding fan, but theirs is pretty tasty -- unfortunately I can't eat more than a few spoonfuls without getting kinda sick of it. Oh well, the decor's fun to look at.
Sheraton Side Table
Early 20th Century
Narra, Lanite, Kamagong and Carabao Bone
H:40” x L:53” x W:25 1/4” (102 cm x 135 cm x 64 cm)
Opening bid: P 300,000
Provenance:
Baliuag, Bulacan or Angeles, Pampanga
Private Collection, United States
Lot 13 of the Leon Gallery Auction on 10 June 2017. Please see www.leon-gallery.com for more information.
The United States was the colony’s biggest trading partner during the 1st three-quarters of the 19th century. Periodicals and magazines brought in by American traders and businessmen introduced the Sheraton Style of furniture as interpreted by Duncan Phyfe in New York. The style became popular in the Philippines during the 2nd quarter of the 19th century onwards and greatly influenced furniture made in Gapan, Nueva Ecija and Baliwag, Bulacan. In the early 20th century, Teodoro Tinio of Angeles, Pampanga began making inlaid furniture that were greatly admired by American servicemen in Fort Stotsenberg (now Clark Field), who bought them to bring home to the United States as souvenirs.
This small and unusually high narra sideboard in the Sheraton Style is part of a dining set that included the so called ‘magic table’ and set of dining chairs. It has a serpentine front with a wide bow-shaped center flanked by narrower concave sides and stands on six tapering legs. The four legs in front and the two behind have turned, tapering shafts carved with reeds resting on a small bun foot topped by a turned reel surmounted by a ring. A vase and spool turning above the reeded shaft continues upward to become the carcass frame. The turned leg replaced the tapering square legs of Sheraton style furniture after the 1850s.
The square upper part of the leg has line moldings and is inlaid on the exposed sides with a stellar flower composed of eight elongated diamond-shaped lozenges radiating from a central bone disk. The two pairs of legs in front that support the concave sections are joined together by concave, bow-shaped arched aprons bordered with lanite line-inlay at the bottom and inlaid with a stellar flower in the middle. Wider, straight and narrow arched aprons with the same pattern and inlay join the side legs together.
The wide apron in the middle, actually a drawer and can be pulled out, is a double-yoke shaped arch ornamented with an inlaid pattern of symmetrical lacy vines of lanite with extremely fine diamond-shaped lozenges forming leaves. The horizontal carcass frames and drawer supports of the piece are inlaid in front and at the sides with a series of diamond-shaped lozenges within a border of molded edges.
The sideboard has a pair of drawers, one on top of each other, flanking a single, wide one at the center which is on the same level as the upper drawers. Those at the sides have concave faces, each with a keyhole and turned kamagong drawer pull inlaid with a bone disc. The bow-fronted middle drawer has a pair of pulls and a large inlaid pattern of curving vines with extremely fine diamond-shaped leaves practically covering the entire face of each drawer.
The sides of the sideboard is carved with a large almost square carved panel inlaid with a border of diamond shaped lozenges like those on the carcass frames that enclose a large pattern of lacy vines and diamond shaped leaves surrounding a stellar flower at the center.
The top of the sideboard is a single, beautifully grained narra plank with a serpentine front, its edges incised with a pair of grooved lines to form a border of straight moldings on either side of diamond-shaped lozenges of carabao bone arranged just like those in the horizontal carcass frames.
-Martin I. Tinio, Jr.
Precast Concrete Table Tennis Table
Contemporary designed concrete table tennis table with the top cantilevered from it central leg. The single piece body and leg is solid concrete with the lines cast in a contrasting colour. The net is a robust galvanised steel construction.
A bespoke, adjustable work table that I designed for our Evening Tweed room in the exhibition 'Pick Me Up 2011' @ Somerset House, London.
The table had been decorated with fine silver, lace napkins and Christmas Bon Bons filled with exciting treasures. Everyone took turns in popping their Bon Bon, mine sprayed out with a colouful paper hat, a silly jokes sheet and a packet full of tiny pieces to make up as a miniture push bike.
All the children squealed with laughter and bounced around in their seats with joy and excitement. What a great Christmas Day.
7DOS - "7 Days of Shooting" "Week #24 - Preparations " "Still Life Sunday"
Digital photo. Old, small, square table cloth, embroidered in purple, fuschia, green and gold. This fabric is gorgeous. I wish I had yards of it and not just a table cloth. A gift from my step-mom. She knows what I like, that's for sure.
Practicing with super-macro. The colors turned out good for once. This piece of fabric is very vibrant and was excited to see that came across. Very minor tweaking to zap some of the glare.
Found along the curb on Massachusetts Avenue in Lexington, MA. The table top flips open where a sewing machine used to live, but that piece is gone now. I'll just keep the top closed and go from there.
www.1001pallets.com/2014/10/pallet-table-12/
Used a single pallet to complete this project, minus the 2" x 4"s.
Demolition of the Majestic Theatre has started. On my walk around the city to see what is happening, May 16, 2014 Christchurch New Zealand.
Opened on 1st March 1930 The Majestic Theatre was built for John Fuller & Sons and was leased to Christchurch Cinemas Ltd. Billed as ‘The Showplace of Christchurch’, the exterior was an Art Deco style containing three floors of offices, known as Majestic House.
In 1946, it was sold to the Kerridge-Odeon chain, and later that year, it was badly damage by a fire. It was renovated to the designs of architect Harry Francis Willis. In the 1960’s, live stage shows became popular at the Majestic Theatre, with ‘Startime Spectacular’ running for quite some time, and also appearances by pop groups from Great Britain, including The Kinks, The Dave Clark Five and Manfred Mann. In 1964 The Beatles played their only concert in Christchurch at the Majestic – this was their final New Zealand concert.
The Majestic Theatre closed on 28th August 1970, and was converted into a nightclub, named Moby Dick’s Nite Spot. Six years later it was again badly damaged by fire and the night club closed. It was later owned by the Christchurch Revival Fellowship Church. For More Info: www.highstreetstories.co.nz/stories/93-the-majestic-theatre
-Table Lamp IV- Height of the lamp is 34cm and diameter of the gourd lampshade is 16cm. Lampshade was decorated with crackle glass beads in three different colours: red, amber, yellow. Perforations were made in 3 different diameters. Stand was finished off with brown jewellery waxed string. The shape of the base is handly carved in wood and painted in rosewood colour.
Lamp is for sale.
Facebook fanpage: facebook.com/gourdlamps
e-mail: gourdlight@gmail.com
Day 6 silver
My daughter has this pretty table lamp in her living room, the grandchildren are convinced that gran is crackers as she takes silly pictures every time she visits.
We were assigned a table setting group assignment in one of my classes. This was what one of the groups produced (not mine).
OFFICIAL WEBSITE: calabarte.com/
FOLLOW CALABARTE ON FACEBOOK: www.facebook.com/calabarte
TABLE LAMP XVIII
The lamp is made of Senegalese gourd.
White carvings are deeper layer of wood which allows some light to pass through it.
At the top of the lamp is closing part locked with little magnets. The base is finished with black jeweller waxed string.
Diameter of the gourd is 21cm. Lamp is 35,5cm high. Diameter of the base is 24,5cm.